**Longlisted for the 2022 DUBLIN Literary Award
**
A woman must emerge from the virtual world she's created to confront
her flesh-and-blood past and family.
Growing up with a menacing drunk for a father and a grief-stricken
mother, a girl spends her 1980s childhood staring at the television to
escape the tension, depression, and looming violence that fill her
suburban home. After winning a modelling competition, she dedicates
herself to becoming a placid image onto which anything can be projected,
a blank slate with a blank stare. Earning enough in Paris to retire in
her twenties, she buys a studio in Montreal and retreats from the world
and its perceived threats, cultivating her existence as an image through
her virtual reality avatar. But when her mother develops cancer and
nears the end of her life, she is forced to leave her cocoon -
surrounded by her posse of augmented reality superheroes - and interact
with the world and her parents without the mask of her perfect, virtual
self.
Georges offers up an alienated childhood with shifting pop culture
obsessions, a woman's awakening to the role of the image in culture, and
her eventual isolation in her apartment and the world online. It is a
catalogue of the anxieties of an age, from nuclear war to terrorism,
climate change to biological warfare. Set in the past and
not-too-distant future of Montreal, The Imago Stage is an ominous tale
of oppression, suppression, and disembodiment.